rawr_xoxo wrote:[spoiler]THIS!!! He was a total b*****d to Harry (and a lot of the other kids) for pretty much all of the time he was at Hogwarts for no particular reason. I'm sorry but to me the whole your-daddy-was-mean-to-me-when-we-were-kids excuse just does not cut it. Even at the end he had no feelings for Harry it was all about Lily, so god knows why Harry felt the need to name a kid after the guy[/spoiler]
[spoiler]I believe that in the books he deliberately asks in that demeanor so that everything goes to plan, Harry was meant to hate snape and not trust his and to be suspicious of him the whole time for certain things in the book to happen. I dont think he really wanted to hate him, it was probably more the fact that every time he looked at harry, he saw his dead beloved.[/spoiler]
[spoiler]Well actually, my interpretation was that he really did hate (or more like grudge) Harry because he looked very much like his father and Snape allowed his hatred for his father (which was somewhat justified to a certain extent) to take a negative perception of Harry, seeing only the bad elements that reminded him of James. This is worsened by the fact that the only remnant of the love of his life is in Harry's eyes, which is embedded in the resemblance of the person he hated most. He didnt have to be nasty to Harry to carry out his mission, his treatment towards him was purely from the anger in his heart. But he literally lived for just one thing, one love, and despite his serious flaws of character, his love proved to be stronger than any other, even Dumbledore was surprised how strong it was when Snape produced Lily's patronus. And its this one element alone, that even after the death of his only love in life, he would do anything for. Anything. And that is what ultimately drives him to protect Harry, to protect the only remnant of Lily.
What I love about the the moment when Snape produces his Patronus is not just the fact that he has the same patronus as Lily Potter but the fact that his love remained so strong and so powerful, that he can produce some one ELSE's patronus. Not even Dumbledore can produce a patronus as powerful as that. That's why Dumbledore staggered at the sight of it, and to realise that afer all this time, Snapes power of love for Lily never diminshed. Harry, despite hating Snape for the way he treated him, appreciated Snape's greatest virtue by naming one his son's after him.
Severus Snape was not a good man but not an evil one either. He never killed anyone (immorally!). He was just a very flawed but passionate man. You just dont get much young adult literature featuring such character complexities as this. When I reach my twilight years, I might forget about Harry Potter and the other colourful characters that populate Rowlings books but I wont ever forget one of the greatest characters in English literature, Severus Snape.[/spoiler]